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Great Washington State Birding Trail
Sun and Sage Loop
Christi
Norman, Director, Great Washington
State Birding Trail, 360-786-8020 x202
Hilary
Hilscher, Communications, 206-963-9454
WASHINGTON BIRDING
TRAIL EXPANDS TO WINE COUNTRY
Visitors with binoculars bring dollars, conservation incentive
to rural areas
OLYMPIA, February 19, 2009—Under the watchful
golden eyes of a live Great Horned Owl and Red-tailed Hawk,
two species of bird regularly seen in Southcentral Washington,
the fifth and newest route of the Great Washington State Birding
Trail, the Sun and Sage Loop, was unveiled in the Cherberg
Building on the state capitol campus Feb. 19th.
“The Sun and Sage Loop will bring
new visitors and new dollars to our rural areas, and gives
us yet another reason to be good stewards of our lands and
waters,” said Sen. Mike Hewitt (R-Walla Walla), who’s
also an Audubon member and bird photographer.
He and Sen. Jerome Delvin (R-Richland)
were given framed copies of the map at the unveiling event.
“It is a good thing to pause and
appreciate the natural world around us,” said Sen. Delvin.
“The birding trail is a guide to some of the special
places around the Tri-Cities – and one more connection
to our agriculture and wine tourism,” he added.
According to Audubon Washington Birding
Trail Director Christi Norman, birding “trails”,
now offered in more than 30 states, are usually self-guided
driving tours to places where birds are likely to be seen.
With 40+ million Americans describing
themselves as interested in bird watching, developers of the
Great Washington State Birding Trail hope to entice both local
residents and out-of-state visitors to the Sun and Sage Loop
which features more than 200 of Washington’s 346 annually
recorded bird species.
This varied Eastern Washington landscape
– sculpted by ice-age floods, weather, and human design
– nurtures Pacific Flyway travelers and avian residents
of sage hillside, wildflower meadow, and leafy forest. Hundreds
of bird species – warbler to woodpecker, kinglet to
kingfisher – thrive amid wide valleys, intimate canyons,
and waterways large and small. During migration, hawks soar
through mountain passes and shorebirds traverse river lowlands.
Winter brings snow to high-country plateaus, and gathers waterbirds
onto natural wetlands and lakes formed by dams on the Columbia
River.
Here, irrigation channels and seasonal
ponds transform desert into orchard and vineyard beneath lofty
basalt cliffs. Find abundant wildlife in protected places:
Wild and Scenic rivers, national wildlife refuges, national
parks and state parks, plus the natural and cultural history
of the Yakama Nation. Here are myriad opportunities to bird
by foot, by bike, and by boat – all in the heart of
Washington’s wine country.
The new map can be seen online here.
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| Live birds highlighted the Feb.
19th unveiling of the Great Washington State Birding Trail’s
newest route, the Sun and Sage Loop. Sen. Jerome Delvin,
second from left, and Sen. Mike Hewitt, fourth from left,
hosted the presentation and received framed copies of
the new map. Others participating in the ceremony included
(l to r) Audubon Washington Birding Trail’s Hilary
Hilscher holding the Great Horned Owl, Birding Trail director
Christi Norman, Audubon Washington Policy Director Nina
Carter, and Tee Martino holding the Red-tailed Hawk. Both
birds are from the non-profit WolfTown on Vashon Island.
Photo by jefflarsen.com. |
The Sun and Sage Loop of the Great Washington
State Birding Trail was developed and funded by Audubon Washington,
the Washington State Department of Transportation, and individual
contributors. Like the first four maps, the new route features
original artwork by noted Washington wildlife painter Ed Newbold.
The live birds featured at the Sun and
Sage unveiling ceremony come from Vashon Island’s Wolftown,
a nonprofit facility that rescues and rehabilitates injured
native birds and other wildlife, and offers them for educational
presentations.
Together with its local chapters, Audubon
Washington produced its first map of the birding trail in
2002, the Cascade Loop. The Coulee Corridor followed in 2003,
Southwest Loop in 2005, and Olympic Loop in 2007. Two additional
routes covering eastern Washington and the Puget Sound area
will complete the birding trail by 2010. All maps contain
information about habitat, bird species, access, and best
seasons for birding. Signs marking birding trail sites will
be installed in coming years.
Copies of the Great Washington State Birding
Trail maps can be ordered
online.
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